South Carolina Rail Road v. Moore

28 Ga. 398
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 28 Ga. 398 (South Carolina Rail Road v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
South Carolina Rail Road v. Moore, 28 Ga. 398 (Ga. 1859).

Opinion

By the Court.

Lumpkin, J.,

delivering the opinion.

1. The first question made in the record and discussed by counsel is, was this an arbitration under the rule of court, or under the act of 1856; or both ?

There was a case pending in court between these parties, and there was a rule of reference made of it by order of the court, with the consent of parties. Subsequently there was an agreement entered into out of court, to submit, not only the matters embraced in the writ, but other matters in dispute not included therein, but germain to them. The agreement to submit provides distinctly, that the arbitration shall be subject to the rule of reference taken in the case, as well as' to the terms and provisions of the act of 1856.

Now, the rule of reference expressly declares, that the award may be excepted to for “fraud, accident, or mistake.” And yet counsel for the defendants in error insist, and so the court decided, that in as much as the act of 1856, authorizes an award to be excepted to only for fraud or corruption in the arbitrators, that the alleged mistake [416]*416in this award, is not examinable into, llis Honor, the presiding judge, remarks — “But when the submission of the 7th July, 1858,” (it should have been the 11th of June, 1858,) “the case of the parties as therein stated, was brought strictly within the provisions of the act under which the submission was mademeaning the act of 1856. Is this so ? and is this conclusion drawn from the fact that the submission was subsequnt to the rule of reference? This inference would have been .legitimate had the submission failed to adopt the rule of reference andtheterms of the law had been repugnant. Butinstead of this, it recites the pending of the action between these parties, and the order of the court rofering the matters in issue to arbitrators; and tben stipulates, as we have already stated, that the arbitration shall be “subject to the rule of reference taken in the case.” "We confess we are unable to see how, under these circumstances, the rule of reference is superseded or abrogated by the submission, although the former he prior in point of time.

The most that can be said is, that the submission, from inadvertence, or some other cause, has presented two contradictory rules to control the arbitration and award. Upon what principle are the defendants in error entitled to the full benefit of the 15th and 16th sections of the act of 1856; and to insist that the award can be attacked only for fraud and corruption according to the 15th; or fraud or corruption according to the 16th section of said act? May not the plaintiffs in error contend with equal plausibility and propriety that the award may be revised for “ fraud, -accident, or mistake,” according to the rule of reference?

It is the duty of the court to harmonize, if possible, these apparently inconsistent stipulations in the submission so as'to give effect to every part of it. The terms of the rule of reference itself, if carefully scrutinized, settle this difficulty conclusively. After providing that the award [417]*417of the arbitrators shall be final between the parties, no appeal to any court lying therefrom, “ except for fraud, accident, or mistake,”it was further ordered, “that the parties have leave to be represented by their counsel before the arbitrators; and that the latter be guided by the rules laid down for the regulation of arbitrators in the act of March 5ih, 1856.”

Here we have a key to unlock the true intent of the parties, When they agreed in the submission that the arbitration shall be subject both to the terms of the act of 1856 and of the rule of reference; they intended that the •arbitrators should be guided in their proceedings by the act of 1856, examining the parties as witnesses, &c., but imposing no restriction upon the right of either to except to the award for “fraud, accident, or mistake.” This we hold to be the obvious and undoubted construction of the submission.

2. Was the alleged mistake inquirable into upon the disclosures made by Joseph Milligan, one of the arbitrators ? We do not find it necessary to decide this point, under the further view which we have taken of this case. We will say, however, that we see serious objections against permitting an arbitrator to impeach his award, as well as a juror his verdict, long subsequent to the time when the finding has been rendered. The award in this case, was signed the 7th day of July, 1858 ; the parties were furnished each with a copy on the 8th, and no complaint is made by the arbitrator until the 15th of that month. Jurors no doubt often become dissatisfied with their verdicts, and courts with their judgments, still they must stand as the law of the case. If the fact be as alleged in Milligan’s letter, that, the arbitrators awarded to the plaintiffs, a gross amount of possible profits and deducted nothing for the profits shown to have been actually made, the law certainly would provide some way [418]*418to enable the defendants to ascertain and correct an error so gross.

3. This brings us to the last and main ground of objection to the award, and that is the want of sufficient cause of action against the defendants, apparent on the face ox the record. The plaintiffs in error maintain that the defendants in error claim in their declaration and by the submission damages for what, by their own showing, is only a public nuisance, for which no private action liés.

There is no dispute that the general rule of law is, that, a private action will not lie for a public nuisance. It is the subject of indictment, not of action. The reason of the rule is, that it would create a multiplicity of actions; one being as well entitled to bring an action as another; and therefore, in cases of public nuisance, the remedy must be by indictment. — Co. Lit. 56 a.; Roll Abr. 88-110; Moor, 180; 2 Brownl, 147; Vaugh, 341; Cro. Eliz. 644; 3 Mod. 294; Carth. 171; Salk, 15 Pl.; 3 Black. Com. 219; 15 Geo. Rep. 61-62. The declaration and submission set out a public nuisance — the obstruction of a navigable river.

To this general rule there is an exception; namely, that if by such a nuisance, the party suffered a particular damage, as if by stopping up the highway by logs, any horse throws him, by which he is hurt or wounded, an action lies. — Cro. Jac. 446; Keb. 849. Now the point at issue is, do the plaintiffs come within the exception?

In this, as in many other cases, where the general principle has been departed from by engrafting exceptions upon it, the line of demarcation frequently becomes too dim and attenuated to bo distinctly visible or clearly stated. We have examined with some care the numerous precedents, English and American, upon this subject; and it is not quite satisfactory to myself to determine on which side the weight of authority preponderates. There is, therefore, a want of entire confidence in the result at [419]*419which the court has arrived. The question has received various determinations, according to the circumstances of each case.

In Pame vs.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Ga. 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-carolina-rail-road-v-moore-ga-1859.